Obama's Wasted, Deadly, And Destructive Presidency
19 January 2017
By Jacob G. Hornberger
Eight years ago, President Obama's administration started with hope and
change. Eight years later, we end up with a legacy of nothing but waste,
death, and destruction.
Libertarians never had any hope, of course, that Barack Obama would dismantle
any aspect of the welfare state. As a dyed-in-the-wool liberal, his commitment
to socialism, regulation, and economic interventionism is unwavering. When,
for example, he addressed the healthcare crisis brought on my Medicare,
Medicaid, regulation, and interventionism by foisting Obamacare onto the
American people, we libertarians were not surprised.
Where libertarians (and lots of liberals) had hope was that Obama would change
the direction that the George W. Bush administration had set for America with
respect to foreign policy and civil liberties.
After all, Obama had made a big deal of having opposed Bush's war on Iraq. On
the campaign trail he also emphasized his supposed deep commitment to civil
liberties, especially given his legal understanding of constitutional
principles.
Alas, no change. Obama's eight years turned out to be nothing more than a
continuation of Bush's eight years, which, like Obama's, consisted of waste,
death, and destruction.
What a shame. Obama had the opportunity to go down in history as having had an
extraordinary presidency, one that brought an end to foreign empire and
foreign interventionism, brought all the troops home and discharged them,
ended Bush's ''war on terrorism'' (and war on Muslims), and dismantled the
extraordinary totalitarian powers that Bush had unilaterally adopted and that
were supposed to be only ''temporary.''
Today, U.S. troops are still fighting, killing, and dying in Iraq and
Afghanistan, with no end in sight. Many Americans have no hope that they will
ever be ended. They have both become America's forever wars.
Americans today continue to live under a regime that has the omnipotent power
to assassinate them, put them into concentration camps, torture them, and
secretly spy on them. How in the world are such totalitarian-like powers
reconcilable with the principles of a free society?
Unfortunately, that' s not all. Obama also initiated one of the
national-security state's classic regime-change operations, this one in Libya.
Like all the others, the result is chaos, crisis, civil war, violence, death,
and destruction.
It's no different, of course, in Syria, another target of a U.S. regime-change
operation — this one against a ruler, Bashar al-Assad, who once served as a
torture-rendition partner in the U.S. war on terrorism. Just ask Canadian
citizen Mahar Arar, who the CIA kidnapped at Dulles Airport and renditioned to
Syria under a torture agreement that is still so secret that the American
people are not permitted to know its terms. It bears mentioning that Arar,
after suffering a year of brutal torture in Syria because of the CIA, turned
out to be a totally innocent man.
The result in of the U.S. government's regime-change operations in Syria?
Ongoing death, destruction, and misery, just like Iraq, Afghanistan, and
Libya.
Let's also not forget the massive refugee crisis in Europe produced by all
this U.S-produced mayhem.
The news media is reporting that Obama's forces dropped more than 26,000 bombs
in the Middle East in 2016 alone. That obviously begs a question: How many
bombs did they drop in the previous 7 years? It has to be a lot. And as
everyone knows, when bombs are dropped, the results include death and
destruction.
Indeed, after eight years as president, Obama didn't even succeed in closing
the Pentagon's and CIA's prison and torture center in Cuba. He had, of course,
promised to do that when he was running for president eight years ago.
On top of all that, Obama succeeded in igniting a new Cold War against Russia,
especially by breaking the U.S. promise to Russia to keep NATO in check.
Instead, breaking the promise, NATO began gobbling up former Warsaw Pact
countries and moving NATO forces (which include German soldiers) and missiles
inexorably closer and closer to Russia's borders.
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see that those moves, along with the
U.S.-supported coup in Ukraine, would produce a crisis with Russia with
respect to Crimea and Ukraine. After all, what would the U.S.
national-security state do if Russia started sending troops and missiles to,
say, Cuba or Mexico? We all know that U.S. officials would go ballistic, just
like Russian officials did when they ordered the takeover in Crimea in
response to what what the U.S.-run NATO was doing.
Meanwhile, during his eight years in office Obama went after government
whistleblowers with a passion and a fierceness that defies credulity. After
all, whistleblowers ordinarily disclose government wrongdoing. Isn't that
something good? Apparently not to Obama, notwithstanding his very late
commutation of the draconian sentence meted out to military whistleblower
Chelsea Manning, who committed the cardinal sin of disclosing grave wrongdoing
on the part of the U.S. military.
I would be remiss if I failed to mention that during his eight years in
office, Obama made himself the president who set the record for deporting the
most illegal immigrants. This from a dyed-in-the-wool liberal who, like other
devout welfare-statists, purports to be a great lover of ''the poor, needy,
and disadvantaged.''
What gives? Why did Obama end up continuing and expanding the Bush legacy?
What happened to all that hope and change?
Those are fascinating questions, ones that unfortunately the mainstream press
isn't asking.
My hunch is that Obama simply lacked the power and the fortitude to overcome
the segment of the federal government that is really running the show — the
national-security establishment — i.e., the Pentagon, the CIA, and the NSA.
I recommend reading the excellent book National Security and Double Government
by Michael J. Glennon, a professor at Tufts University. Glennon hits the nail
on the head. He shows that it's the national-security establishment that is
really in charge of the federal government. It permits the other three
sections — the president, the Congress, and the judiciary — to maintain the
appearance that they are in charge.
In my opinion, that's why Gitmo is still open. I think the Pentagon and the
CIA wouldn't permit it to be closed and mobilized their forces in Congress to
ensure that it wouldn't be closed. I think that's why the U.S. is still in
Iraq and the rest of the Middle East and in Afghanistan. That's why there is a
Cold War II with Russia. That's why American warships have ''pivoted'' to the
South China Sea, where they can gin up crises with China. Indeed, I think
that's why U.S. forces are being sent to Poland in the last week of the Obama
presidency.
I could, of course, be wrong. It's entirely possible that Barack Obama
suddenly decided, for some unknown reason, to abandon his pre-election
promises and principles and shift course by using his presidency to mimic the
legacy of George W. Bush. I just think that my explanation — that Obama found
himself unable to stand up to and oppose the overwhelming power of what
President Eisenhower called the ''military industrial complex'' — makes more
sense.
After all, let's not forget who has been the beneficiary of sixteen continuous
years of death and destruction and loss of liberty and prosperity — the
national security establishment.
Will the next four years be any different from the last 16 years? We will soon
find out.
Jacob G. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom
Foundation. He was born and raised in Laredo, Texas, and received his B.A. in
economics from Virginia Military Institute and his law degree from the
University of Texas. He was a trial attorney for twelve years in Texas. He
also was an adjunct professor at the University of Dallas, where he taught
law and economics. In 1987, Mr. Hornberger left the practice of law to become
director of programs at the Foundation for Economic Education. He has
advanced freedom and free markets on talk-radio stations all across the
country as well as on Fox News' Neil Cavuto and Greta van Susteren shows and
he appeared as a regular commentator on Judge Andrew Napolitano's show
Freedom Watch. View these interviews at LewRockwell.com and from Full
Context.